Last week, Sandy Hook Promise, a non-profit organization started by the parents of children killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School, announced their canceling of Megyn Kelly as the host of their annual gala. Their reason? They weren’t happy that Kelly was conducting an interview with InfoWars’ Alex Jones, who has said he believed “parents faked their own death.”

On Thursday, the lawyers representing 12 of the families, sent a letter to NBC, asking them to refrain from airing Kelly’s interview with Jones.

Surely, we can agree that these families have suffered enough already, and that they will continue to suffer enough to last several lifetimes. Which is why we cannot fathom — from a moral, ethical or legal standpoint — NBC’s decision to amplify the voice of a man who has made a living debasing that suffering and smearing our clients’ names. Over the last few years, Alex Jones has weaponized his radio show to publish false and defamatory statements about our clients: chief among them that they are actors perpetrating a massive fraud on the American public by faking the deaths of their loved ones.